Daily Trojan, Vol. 57, No. 10, October 01, 1965 |
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Craig Grant: Trustee Scholar
Anyone who can maintain a 3.8 grade point in high school and also run the half mile in 1:51 seconds for his prep track team deserves recognition.
And the outstanding Illinois student and athlete who achieved these marks has received it.
Dr. N orma 11 Topping, USC President, announced last week that Craig Grant of Westchester. 111., a senior at Hillside’s Proviso West High School, has been naed as a Trustee Scholar for the 1965-66 school year.
Won Medals
Grant, a top student, was a member of the National Scholastic Honor Society for two years and won bronze, silver, and gold scholarship medals from his school.
A science and mathematics major. Grant also participated in track and cross-country for four vears.
He was a member of two relay teams that set national interscholastic records in 1963 and 1961. His personal time in the 880 last year was one of the top in the nation.
The USC Trustee Scholar program was begun in 1963 to identify and attract top high school students from all over the nation. The program is strictly honorary and has no relation to financial need.
Needs Grades
To receive the designation, a student must be deemed to have a grade point of no less than A-minus, a very high College Entrance Examination Board score, outstanding personality and character, a wide range of community and school interests and particularly unusual talents.
Final selection of the Trustee Scholars is made on the basis- of interviews - with trustees. President Topping or a vice-president.
As long as he continues to meet the requirements. a Trustee Scholar retains his title for his four years at the university.
A Hall of Fame is being planned as a segment of the projected Awards and Honors Collection. When it is completed, the names and pictures of all Trustee Scholars will be on permanent display.
University of Southern California
DAILY • TROJAN
Vol. xvn
LOS ANGELES. CALIFORNIA, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1965
No. 10
L.A. Pastor
Barbecue, Grid Battle for
Business
Society
Lauded
'm&\
University Magazine Debates Italian Reds
An analysis of radical Demaitre underscores a re-ideological trends within the visionist movement in Italian
Paul Bloland, dean of students, will discuss the role of “The University Parent” at a 1 p.m. convocation to commence the annual Parents’ Night tomorrow.
The evening will start with a barbecue dinner jn Alumni Park and will be climaxed by the USC-Oregon
State football game in the Memorial Coliseum.
Gay Moore, chairman of the Parents’ Night Committee, has received over 2500 responses from parents indicating a large turn-out for the evening’s festivities.
Dean Bloland’s speech will follow a discussion of the goals and achievements of the Master Plan. Dr. John Cantelon, university chaplan, and John Sullivan, ASSC president, will also speak to the gathering in Bovard Auditorium.
Tickets for students not living in residence halls may be purchased at the special events office for $1.50 all day.
Tables and chairs will be first !set UP ky Spurs and Amazons, who will also act as hostesses. Following the barbecue, the Marching Band and the Trojan Horse will lead students and parents on a
Dr. John G. Carlson, associate professor of management, announced yesterday that USC’s chapter of the Society for the Advancement of Management has been rated the second highest in the nation by the national chapter.
The rating was based on the activities of the various chapters during the 1964-65 academic year. Six chapters finished in a tie for place with a perfect score, while USC tied with San Jose State College for second Trojan place.
The presentation of avrardsl^"'"—"^—” ""y “ ,11 be made m New \orkinue and tQ (he Coljseum fQr
1 will
Italian Communist Party Red ranks highlights the new issue of traditional Communist Affairs, a bi-j dogma, monthly periodical published bv the USC Research Insti-;
away from the Marxist-Leninist
Moderate and right wing party VIPs are openly re-tute on Communist. Strategy Nuking revolution as a means
and Propaganda.
In an article. “Italian Com-munism: Debate and Dilemma.” writer Edmund
Physics
Findings
Reported
to power as well as conceding]
,the benefits of Italian capitalism to the detriment of cer-l tain Marxian economic : theories.
One-World Party
The doctrine of a one-world party has also been questioned. with some—including the late Red boss, Palmiro T o g 1 i a 11 i—suggesting the creation of several autonom- City on Oct- 15 at the Second
the game.
Biames
Revolt
lambasts Policemen At Rally
PLACiNG THE BLAME — Rev. Casper Glenn accuses L.A. police of sparking the southern area revolt last month. He
Li _________• the southern area revolt last month. H
Homecoming project headstart Decoration
Daily Trojan Photo by Jim Willcockson
spoke yesterday at noon before a crowd of over 200. His talk was sponsored by the Human Relations Committee.
, '
I:..: .
MORRIS UPPER
. . SAM President
Rules Set
Crosstown rivalries and campus contentions will merge as one this year as the rules for Homecoming house decorations have been set to follow the theme, “Homecoming ’65: USC vs. UCLA.”
Clyde Doheney, house decorations chairman, said living groups and service organizations are free to design their gram at the School of Dentis-
100 Children to Receive Free Dental Treatment
In a unique program involving coordination between various agencies around the Southern California area, more than 100 children from Project Headstart will receive a free dental care pro-
Economic Opportunity of the
By STAX METZLER Co-Night Editor
A South Central Los Angeles pastor accused L.A. police yesterday of directly sparking that area’s revolt last month.
Rev. Casper Glenn, speaking at a Human Relations Committee rally in Alumni Park, told the more than 200 gathered students that the rioters were in effect begging to be heard.
In a chronological analysis of the revolt’s beginning, Mr. Glenn traced how local gang leaders had assembled for a press conference and leadership discussion on Thursday, Aug. 12.
Wavering Stand He indicted police for their wavering stand that finally culminated when they “marched shoulder to shoulder with rifles ready’’ into a street dance.
Mr. Glenn said he had earlier been told by a police inspector that the milling crowd would hold the dance if they would disperse by 11 p.m.
He had promised that only Negro policemen in street clothes would be there, though uniformed white po lice would ring the area a block away.
“I told this to the people
‘ The children came from; and they went to get a record U.S. Government in coorpera- neighborhoods of minority player. Just then someone tion with the Los Angeles groups, such as Negroes andjyelled ‘You’re a damned liar.' County Schools to give chil- and Spanish speaking peo- I turned around and saw the dren from culturally and eco- pie,” said Mrs. Marion Jen-nomically deprived neighbor-kins, speaking about the proj-t h e i r ect.
A research team in electrical engineering, electronics.
the Com- Annual Film Festival held by the national chapter.
USC’s chapter, in addition
ous parties within munist sphere.
Demaitre discloses that a and physics reported their party schism has developed to the publication of Com-findings to faculty members between the reformers and munique,” a newsletter, spon-
leftists who follow the sors a series of speakers. It
was responsible for bringing Stan Freberg to campus last
decorations without any lim-; try’s main campus facility, it on size or ideas. 925 W. 34th St., Sunday.
The only boundaries set are
hoods a headstart in school opportunities.
police coming.
Lights Off
“Then somebody turned off
spent eight weeks in a pro-Project Headstart was in-igram patterned along the
in meetings yesterday.
A $250,000 grant from theChinese Communist line, technical advisory committee The break, an outgrowth of the joint Armed Forces, of the greater Sino-Soviet A-rmv, Air Force and is financing the group.
The children will the maximum financial out- for treatments on Nov. puts of $75 for Greeks and Dec. 12, and Jan. 9 .
$35 for service groups and dorms, and a ban on any type augurated by the Office of lines of nursery school, of automation.
As in past years, fraternities and sororities will con-
“We tried to give these all the street lights. The
Children from v a r i o u s youngsters a headstart in crowd picked up rocks and Southern California areas their schooling and wanted bottles and scattered to the return who entered either kindergar- to help bridge the gap in east and west. The police 21, ten or the first grade this fall some cultural areas.”
Volunteer Services
marched straight south. 'Within minutes the fires
semester and is planning to struct tlxeir decorations at
Navv split, has forced the Italian present speakers of the same
leadership to move with ex-
Facultv members discussed treme caution
caliber this year. The society
their houses while other: groups will use the frames Business! provided for them or. Univer-
“Communist Affairs” is School coeducational organi- S1^y Avenue.
such projects as interaction between conduction electrons .edited by Dr. Roger Swear- zation.
be ment executives, representative Vincent Lauricella said.
and magnetic moments, im-1 ingen. who also serves as diperfection chemistry, and rector of the Institute, electron probe analysis of Separate issues may semiconductors. purchased for one dollar.
Also discussed was quadrupled locomotion automata, which has to do with soft landings on the moon.
Riots Talk Dr. Malcolm B. Stinson, | dean of the School of Social Work, spoke about the recent1 Watts riots at a dinner held ' in the Faculty Center.
Dr. Tracy E. Strevev. vice j president for academic affairs, welcomed the 50 visit- j ort to the campus. '
Guided tours of research Parhament of thought,” Stu- undreamed avenues exist and
Six judges, to be selected from the administration and
“We are currently conducting a search for top manage- faculty, will award first and
second place trophies in three • categories.
Managers' Institute To Open Tomorrow
Under the direction of Dr. began breaking out and the Gerald Kirshbaum. assistant’ police lost all control, professor of pedodontics. the Mr. Glenn also charged the School of Dentistry volun-j police with hampering the ef teered its services and facili-' forts of concerned Negroes to ties for the program, entitled seal off the area from both
the Advanced Senior Training Incentive Program.
white and Negro non-residents that day, not recanting
Fifty dental students. 20 until at least three whites had faculty and 10 staff members *3een seriously injured.
Plea to Listen Following his plea for area
off USC’s fiftTi* a'rmuri^ManageriaV'p o'lTc v*In^itute.:the complete dental program; citizens to listen to what the
for the children under the Negroes have been saying —
Fifty of Southern California’s businessmen will Wl11 take Part in project, meet at the Rancho Santa Fe Inn this weekend to kick T!ie students will handle
STUDENT LEADERS RECEPTION
Clive Grafton University of
‘ The university should be a Grafton said untouched and
laboratories were conducted
following the speeches
USC is the eighth univer- student leaders yesterday at
sity in the nation to conduct a rec~?tion his honor.
dent Activities Director Clive j are open to student explora-Grafton told a gathering of tion.
research for the joint services. The others are Harvard,
MIT. Columbia. Stanford, Illi-jly,”
“Student government is not a force to be used negative-he said, “but rather a
nois, UC Berkeley, and force to be used for build-Brooklyn Polytechnic Insti- ing.”
Dubito Aims to Inform On International Topics
The first edition of a new tions and will continue publi-publication, Dubito: A Start- cation in accordance with ing Point, will appear on cam- reader interest.
Perrett explained that Dubito is designed to keep the students informed.
“So much is missed in university life, as elsewhere, simply because we are uninformed. We hope to narrow this information gap through Dubito,” he said.
“Our purpose is two-fold: to further advance the co-hesivenes.s of the IR student body, and to provide a forum ivhere voices that may be ’ost in the tumult of the multiversity can be heard.”
pus this week.
The mimeographed paper will feature articles and essays on national and international topics representing the beliefs of various authors.
Dubito does not represent the opinions of Delta Phi Epsilon, the professional International Relations fraternity that is sponsoring it, H. Geoffrey Perrett, fraternity president, said.
The paper will depend pri uaarily on student contribu-
“Student government on this campus must meet the challenges of the modern university and accept a role of leadership while remaining within the structure of the university family areas and scope of responsibility,” he explained.
Grafton believes students can do a great deal in advancing the affirmative side of university life.
“This university is changing, and the changes are brought about by the dynamic qualities of the institution.”
Quoting the late President Kennedy, Grafton said, “I firmly believe that the torch has passed to a new generation.
“I also believe this torch was not designed to lead placards and riots, r ut to light the way for planning
and reason,” he added.
He predicted that USC’s student leadership programs' will one day top the list of government programs at American universities.
(MPI).
The institute, sponsored by the Graduate School supervision of Busness Administration, attracts men with two major qualifications, John Pederson, in charge of executive programs, said. They are experienced and successful.
“The primary purpose of MPI is to expand managerial atilities and to provide modern skills for those executives on the verge of accepting even more responsibility/’ added Dean Robert Dockson.
30 Sessions After the initial weekend,
30 sessions will be held on Mondays in Room 104 Bridge Hall beginning Oct. 4.
Classes taught by the
Outlines
Thought
of faculty staff members.
Films Used The program will include a
and a°d to try to understand why they acted as they did — he introduced a Nigerian student who arrived in Los Angeles
detailed presentation of the during the riots, problems dealing with the He told of being stopped in care of the teeth to the chil- his car in Long Beach, hand-dren and to their parents. cuffed, beaten, clubbed, jail-Through the use of films ed and charged with intent to and demonstrations, the chil- commit murder.
After police found out he methods of was an African student he and dental was released and the charges j were dropped.
dren will be exposed to the most up-to-date tooth brushing hygenic care.
Campus Radio Station Offers Student Posts
KUSC-FM, the university-sponsored radio station. Graduate School of Business has openings for students interested in broadcasting will and engineering.
An organizational staff meeting and training session will be held at noon today in 231 Hancock Foundation. It will begin broadcast- ______
ing Monday.
faculty
Daily Troian Photo 8y Liane Kruse
UNIVERSITY LEADERS—Clive Grafton (I), new student activities director, Clyde Doheny and John Sullivan talk at student leaders reception in Town & Gown.
Administration
begin at 3 p.m.
Such skills as the computer sciences, new ideas in budgeting, international business, interpersonal relations, and long range corporate planning will be discussed.
Diverse Groups
“Each year it is really exciting to see men with eighth grade educations and Ph.D’s in these groups, men from mammoth corporations and small stores, solving each other's problems and seeing how much they have in common,” Pederson said.
A thousand dollars will be charged for the course and will be paid by either the businessmen themselves or their companies.
Companies that have participated in the institute in the past include Bank of America, Buffums', Hughes Aircraft Company, and the Xerox Corporation.
Positions open include work | in music, sports, news, publicity, announcing, remote crew, writing, and all other levels of operation.
Neither experience in broadcasting nor a communications major is necessary, the faculty of the Department of Communications and student staff members will provide the necessary training.
.
Paying jobs are available in the field of engineering. However, engineering shifts require either 2\'-> or 5 hours at the KUSC studios at least one day a week.
KUSC-FM. which is run entirely by USC students, broadcasts educational programs to greater Los Angeles and Southern California.
Hoover Hearings Resume Monday?
Completion of the Los Angeles City Council hearings on the Hoover Redevelopment Project w a s postponed yesterday until Monday, or possibly Tuesday.
USC administrators had hoped the hearings would be concluded yesterday, hut additional testimony from the opponents delayed the hearing.
The proponents, including USC, are set to give an hour summation Monday, followed by an hour for the opponents. The hearing will open at 10:30 a.m.
Object Description
Description
| Title | Daily Trojan, Vol. 57, No. 10, October 01, 1965 |
| Full text | r Craig Grant: Trustee Scholar Anyone who can maintain a 3.8 grade point in high school and also run the half mile in 1:51 seconds for his prep track team deserves recognition. And the outstanding Illinois student and athlete who achieved these marks has received it. Dr. N orma 11 Topping, USC President, announced last week that Craig Grant of Westchester. 111., a senior at Hillside’s Proviso West High School, has been naed as a Trustee Scholar for the 1965-66 school year. Won Medals Grant, a top student, was a member of the National Scholastic Honor Society for two years and won bronze, silver, and gold scholarship medals from his school. A science and mathematics major. Grant also participated in track and cross-country for four vears. He was a member of two relay teams that set national interscholastic records in 1963 and 1961. His personal time in the 880 last year was one of the top in the nation. The USC Trustee Scholar program was begun in 1963 to identify and attract top high school students from all over the nation. The program is strictly honorary and has no relation to financial need. Needs Grades To receive the designation, a student must be deemed to have a grade point of no less than A-minus, a very high College Entrance Examination Board score, outstanding personality and character, a wide range of community and school interests and particularly unusual talents. Final selection of the Trustee Scholars is made on the basis- of interviews - with trustees. President Topping or a vice-president. As long as he continues to meet the requirements. a Trustee Scholar retains his title for his four years at the university. A Hall of Fame is being planned as a segment of the projected Awards and Honors Collection. When it is completed, the names and pictures of all Trustee Scholars will be on permanent display. University of Southern California DAILY • TROJAN Vol. xvn LOS ANGELES. CALIFORNIA, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1965 No. 10 L.A. Pastor Barbecue, Grid Battle for Business Society Lauded 'm&\ University Magazine Debates Italian Reds An analysis of radical Demaitre underscores a re-ideological trends within the visionist movement in Italian Paul Bloland, dean of students, will discuss the role of “The University Parent” at a 1 p.m. convocation to commence the annual Parents’ Night tomorrow. The evening will start with a barbecue dinner jn Alumni Park and will be climaxed by the USC-Oregon State football game in the Memorial Coliseum. Gay Moore, chairman of the Parents’ Night Committee, has received over 2500 responses from parents indicating a large turn-out for the evening’s festivities. Dean Bloland’s speech will follow a discussion of the goals and achievements of the Master Plan. Dr. John Cantelon, university chaplan, and John Sullivan, ASSC president, will also speak to the gathering in Bovard Auditorium. Tickets for students not living in residence halls may be purchased at the special events office for $1.50 all day. Tables and chairs will be first !set UP ky Spurs and Amazons, who will also act as hostesses. Following the barbecue, the Marching Band and the Trojan Horse will lead students and parents on a Dr. John G. Carlson, associate professor of management, announced yesterday that USC’s chapter of the Society for the Advancement of Management has been rated the second highest in the nation by the national chapter. The rating was based on the activities of the various chapters during the 1964-65 academic year. Six chapters finished in a tie for place with a perfect score, while USC tied with San Jose State College for second Trojan place. The presentation of avrardsl^"'"—"^—” ""y “ ,11 be made m New \orkinue and tQ (he Coljseum fQr 1 will Italian Communist Party Red ranks highlights the new issue of traditional Communist Affairs, a bi-j dogma, monthly periodical published bv the USC Research Insti-; away from the Marxist-Leninist Moderate and right wing party VIPs are openly re-tute on Communist. Strategy Nuking revolution as a means and Propaganda. In an article. “Italian Com-munism: Debate and Dilemma.” writer Edmund Physics Findings Reported to power as well as conceding] ,the benefits of Italian capitalism to the detriment of cer-l tain Marxian economic : theories. One-World Party The doctrine of a one-world party has also been questioned. with some—including the late Red boss, Palmiro T o g 1 i a 11 i—suggesting the creation of several autonom- City on Oct- 15 at the Second the game. Biames Revolt lambasts Policemen At Rally PLACiNG THE BLAME — Rev. Casper Glenn accuses L.A. police of sparking the southern area revolt last month. He Li _________• the southern area revolt last month. H Homecoming project headstart Decoration Daily Trojan Photo by Jim Willcockson spoke yesterday at noon before a crowd of over 200. His talk was sponsored by the Human Relations Committee. , ' I:..: . MORRIS UPPER . . SAM President Rules Set Crosstown rivalries and campus contentions will merge as one this year as the rules for Homecoming house decorations have been set to follow the theme, “Homecoming ’65: USC vs. UCLA.” Clyde Doheney, house decorations chairman, said living groups and service organizations are free to design their gram at the School of Dentis- 100 Children to Receive Free Dental Treatment In a unique program involving coordination between various agencies around the Southern California area, more than 100 children from Project Headstart will receive a free dental care pro- Economic Opportunity of the By STAX METZLER Co-Night Editor A South Central Los Angeles pastor accused L.A. police yesterday of directly sparking that area’s revolt last month. Rev. Casper Glenn, speaking at a Human Relations Committee rally in Alumni Park, told the more than 200 gathered students that the rioters were in effect begging to be heard. In a chronological analysis of the revolt’s beginning, Mr. Glenn traced how local gang leaders had assembled for a press conference and leadership discussion on Thursday, Aug. 12. Wavering Stand He indicted police for their wavering stand that finally culminated when they “marched shoulder to shoulder with rifles ready’’ into a street dance. Mr. Glenn said he had earlier been told by a police inspector that the milling crowd would hold the dance if they would disperse by 11 p.m. He had promised that only Negro policemen in street clothes would be there, though uniformed white po lice would ring the area a block away. “I told this to the people ‘ The children came from; and they went to get a record U.S. Government in coorpera- neighborhoods of minority player. Just then someone tion with the Los Angeles groups, such as Negroes andjyelled ‘You’re a damned liar.' County Schools to give chil- and Spanish speaking peo- I turned around and saw the dren from culturally and eco- pie,” said Mrs. Marion Jen-nomically deprived neighbor-kins, speaking about the proj-t h e i r ect. A research team in electrical engineering, electronics. the Com- Annual Film Festival held by the national chapter. USC’s chapter, in addition ous parties within munist sphere. Demaitre discloses that a and physics reported their party schism has developed to the publication of Com-findings to faculty members between the reformers and munique,” a newsletter, spon- leftists who follow the sors a series of speakers. It was responsible for bringing Stan Freberg to campus last decorations without any lim-; try’s main campus facility, it on size or ideas. 925 W. 34th St., Sunday. The only boundaries set are hoods a headstart in school opportunities. police coming. Lights Off “Then somebody turned off spent eight weeks in a pro-Project Headstart was in-igram patterned along the in meetings yesterday. A $250,000 grant from theChinese Communist line, technical advisory committee The break, an outgrowth of the joint Armed Forces, of the greater Sino-Soviet A-rmv, Air Force and is financing the group. The children will the maximum financial out- for treatments on Nov. puts of $75 for Greeks and Dec. 12, and Jan. 9 . $35 for service groups and dorms, and a ban on any type augurated by the Office of lines of nursery school, of automation. As in past years, fraternities and sororities will con- “We tried to give these all the street lights. The Children from v a r i o u s youngsters a headstart in crowd picked up rocks and Southern California areas their schooling and wanted bottles and scattered to the return who entered either kindergar- to help bridge the gap in east and west. The police 21, ten or the first grade this fall some cultural areas.” Volunteer Services marched straight south. 'Within minutes the fires semester and is planning to struct tlxeir decorations at Navv split, has forced the Italian present speakers of the same leadership to move with ex- Facultv members discussed treme caution caliber this year. The society their houses while other: groups will use the frames Business! provided for them or. Univer- “Communist Affairs” is School coeducational organi- S1^y Avenue. such projects as interaction between conduction electrons .edited by Dr. Roger Swear- zation. be ment executives, representative Vincent Lauricella said. and magnetic moments, im-1 ingen. who also serves as diperfection chemistry, and rector of the Institute, electron probe analysis of Separate issues may semiconductors. purchased for one dollar. Also discussed was quadrupled locomotion automata, which has to do with soft landings on the moon. Riots Talk Dr. Malcolm B. Stinson, dean of the School of Social Work, spoke about the recent1 Watts riots at a dinner held ' in the Faculty Center. Dr. Tracy E. Strevev. vice j president for academic affairs, welcomed the 50 visit- j ort to the campus. ' Guided tours of research Parhament of thought,” Stu- undreamed avenues exist and Six judges, to be selected from the administration and “We are currently conducting a search for top manage- faculty, will award first and second place trophies in three • categories. Managers' Institute To Open Tomorrow Under the direction of Dr. began breaking out and the Gerald Kirshbaum. assistant’ police lost all control, professor of pedodontics. the Mr. Glenn also charged the School of Dentistry volun-j police with hampering the ef teered its services and facili-' forts of concerned Negroes to ties for the program, entitled seal off the area from both the Advanced Senior Training Incentive Program. white and Negro non-residents that day, not recanting Fifty dental students. 20 until at least three whites had faculty and 10 staff members *3een seriously injured. Plea to Listen Following his plea for area off USC’s fiftTi* a'rmuri^ManageriaV'p o'lTc v*In^itute.:the complete dental program; citizens to listen to what the for the children under the Negroes have been saying — Fifty of Southern California’s businessmen will Wl11 take Part in project, meet at the Rancho Santa Fe Inn this weekend to kick T!ie students will handle STUDENT LEADERS RECEPTION Clive Grafton University of ‘ The university should be a Grafton said untouched and laboratories were conducted following the speeches USC is the eighth univer- student leaders yesterday at sity in the nation to conduct a rec~?tion his honor. dent Activities Director Clive j are open to student explora-Grafton told a gathering of tion. research for the joint services. The others are Harvard, MIT. Columbia. Stanford, Illi-jly,” “Student government is not a force to be used negative-he said, “but rather a nois, UC Berkeley, and force to be used for build-Brooklyn Polytechnic Insti- ing.” Dubito Aims to Inform On International Topics The first edition of a new tions and will continue publi-publication, Dubito: A Start- cation in accordance with ing Point, will appear on cam- reader interest. Perrett explained that Dubito is designed to keep the students informed. “So much is missed in university life, as elsewhere, simply because we are uninformed. We hope to narrow this information gap through Dubito,” he said. “Our purpose is two-fold: to further advance the co-hesivenes.s of the IR student body, and to provide a forum ivhere voices that may be ’ost in the tumult of the multiversity can be heard.” pus this week. The mimeographed paper will feature articles and essays on national and international topics representing the beliefs of various authors. Dubito does not represent the opinions of Delta Phi Epsilon, the professional International Relations fraternity that is sponsoring it, H. Geoffrey Perrett, fraternity president, said. The paper will depend pri uaarily on student contribu- “Student government on this campus must meet the challenges of the modern university and accept a role of leadership while remaining within the structure of the university family areas and scope of responsibility,” he explained. Grafton believes students can do a great deal in advancing the affirmative side of university life. “This university is changing, and the changes are brought about by the dynamic qualities of the institution.” Quoting the late President Kennedy, Grafton said, “I firmly believe that the torch has passed to a new generation. “I also believe this torch was not designed to lead placards and riots, r ut to light the way for planning and reason,” he added. He predicted that USC’s student leadership programs' will one day top the list of government programs at American universities. (MPI). The institute, sponsored by the Graduate School supervision of Busness Administration, attracts men with two major qualifications, John Pederson, in charge of executive programs, said. They are experienced and successful. “The primary purpose of MPI is to expand managerial atilities and to provide modern skills for those executives on the verge of accepting even more responsibility/’ added Dean Robert Dockson. 30 Sessions After the initial weekend, 30 sessions will be held on Mondays in Room 104 Bridge Hall beginning Oct. 4. Classes taught by the Outlines Thought of faculty staff members. Films Used The program will include a and a°d to try to understand why they acted as they did — he introduced a Nigerian student who arrived in Los Angeles detailed presentation of the during the riots, problems dealing with the He told of being stopped in care of the teeth to the chil- his car in Long Beach, hand-dren and to their parents. cuffed, beaten, clubbed, jail-Through the use of films ed and charged with intent to and demonstrations, the chil- commit murder. After police found out he methods of was an African student he and dental was released and the charges j were dropped. dren will be exposed to the most up-to-date tooth brushing hygenic care. Campus Radio Station Offers Student Posts KUSC-FM, the university-sponsored radio station. Graduate School of Business has openings for students interested in broadcasting will and engineering. An organizational staff meeting and training session will be held at noon today in 231 Hancock Foundation. It will begin broadcast- ______ ing Monday. faculty Daily Troian Photo 8y Liane Kruse UNIVERSITY LEADERS—Clive Grafton (I), new student activities director, Clyde Doheny and John Sullivan talk at student leaders reception in Town & Gown. Administration begin at 3 p.m. Such skills as the computer sciences, new ideas in budgeting, international business, interpersonal relations, and long range corporate planning will be discussed. Diverse Groups “Each year it is really exciting to see men with eighth grade educations and Ph.D’s in these groups, men from mammoth corporations and small stores, solving each other's problems and seeing how much they have in common,” Pederson said. A thousand dollars will be charged for the course and will be paid by either the businessmen themselves or their companies. Companies that have participated in the institute in the past include Bank of America, Buffums', Hughes Aircraft Company, and the Xerox Corporation. Positions open include work in music, sports, news, publicity, announcing, remote crew, writing, and all other levels of operation. Neither experience in broadcasting nor a communications major is necessary, the faculty of the Department of Communications and student staff members will provide the necessary training. . Paying jobs are available in the field of engineering. However, engineering shifts require either 2\'-> or 5 hours at the KUSC studios at least one day a week. KUSC-FM. which is run entirely by USC students, broadcasts educational programs to greater Los Angeles and Southern California. Hoover Hearings Resume Monday? Completion of the Los Angeles City Council hearings on the Hoover Redevelopment Project w a s postponed yesterday until Monday, or possibly Tuesday. USC administrators had hoped the hearings would be concluded yesterday, hut additional testimony from the opponents delayed the hearing. The proponents, including USC, are set to give an hour summation Monday, followed by an hour for the opponents. The hearing will open at 10:30 a.m. |
| Archival file | uaic_Volume1433/uschist-dt-1965-10-01~001.tif |
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